Magnus Carlsen wins the 2015 FIDE World Chess Rapid Championship in Berlin |
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Tuesday, 20 October 2015 | ||||
Stephan Oliver Platz reports from Berlin, Germany
The German grandmaster Jan Gustafsson commentated on the games. Here he is joined by Peter Svidler after having finished his game. On the left side you can see a queue. They are waiting for an opportunity to enter the playing hall. Only after some fans had gone others were permitted to enter. Left to right: Ilya Merenzon (CEO of AGON), former FIDE president Fridrik Olafsson, FIDE president Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, Herbert Bastian (president of the German Chess Federation) and 10th World Chess Champion Boris Spassky. On Sunday almost everybody expected that Karjakin would go on where he had finished the day before, but after two draws with Ian Nepomniachtchi and Gadir Guseinev he lost against Teimour Radjabov. After a win versus Vladimir Malakhov Karjakin suffered a second loss against Igor Kovalenko. So he made only 2 out of 5 on day 2 having now 6,5 points while Carlsen repeated his 4 out of 5 result from Saturday. Sergei Zhigalko from Belarus beat Ian Nepomniachtchi in round 10 and joined Magnus in the lead with 8 points. Like Carlsen he had made 4 out of 5 on both days. Behind them were Igor Kovalenko, Vladimir Kramnik and Vassily Ivanchuk (7,5 each).
On Monday Magnus Carlsen maintained his lead while the positions behind him changed several times. In round 14 Ex World Chess Champion Vladimir Kramnik might have stopped the young Norwegian, but to the the surprise of the spectators after only 16 moves their game ended with a draw by a threefold repetition. Kramnik had to play with the Black pieces and Carlsen wisely opened with 1.e4. A Berlin defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 Nf6 4.o-o Nxe4) was offered by Kramnik, but Carlsen avoided the well known endgame by playing 5.Re1 instead of 5.d4. Perhaps Kramnik should have risked another defense, e. g. 3. f5!? or 3. Bc5 4.c3 f5!?, because after this draw he could no longer win the tournament. In the same round Vassily Ivanchuk had lost his game on time in a winning position against Teimour Radjabov.
Before the last round Carlsen had 11 out of 14. Only Ian Nepomniachtchi, Teimour Radjabov and Leinier Dominguez (10 points each) now had still a theoretical chance to catch him. Shakriyar Mamedyarov did his best, but was not able to win against Carlsen. Their game ended in a draw after 54 moves. Ian Nepomniachtchi drew against Leinier Dominguez, and so did Teimour Radjabov versus Maxime Vachier-Lagrave. So Carlsen defended his title with 11,5 points followed by three players with 10,5. According to the tie-break rules Ian Nepomniachtchi became 2nd, Teimour Radjabov 3rd and Leinier Dominguez 4th. The final standings were: 1. Magnus Carlsen (Norway) 11,5 2. Ian Nepomniachtchi (Russia) 10.5 3. Teimour Radjabov (Azerbaijan) 10,5 4. Perez Leinier Dominguez (Cuba) 10,5 5. Dmitry Bocharov (Russia) 10 6. Vladimir Kramnik (Russia) 10 7. Vladimir Onischuk (Ukraine) 10 8. Vassily Ivanchuk (Ukraine) 10 9. Igor Kovalenko (Latvia) 10 10. Shakhriyar Mamedyarov (Azerbaijan) 10 11. Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (France) 10 12. Ernesto Inarkiev (Russia) 10 13. Denis Khismatullin (Russia) 9,5 14. Rustam Kasimdzhanov (Uzbekistan) 9,5 15. Vladimir Malakhov (Russia) 9,5 16. Yuriy Kryvoruchko (Ukraine) 9,5 17. Anton Korobov (Ukraine) 9,5 18. Sergei Zhigalko (Belarus) 9,5 19. Sergey Karjakin (Russia) 9,5 20. A.R. Saleh Salem (United Arab Emirates) 9,5 21. Vladimir Fedoseev (Russia) 9,5 22. Radoslaw Wojtaszek (Poland) 9,5 23. David Navara (Czech Republic) 9,5 24. Gadir Guseinov (Azerbaijan) 9,5 25. Viswanathan Anand (India) 9,5 (158 participants)
Magnus Carlsen needs a drink. At the press conference after the last round Carlsen had a simple explanation for his success: I didn't blunder much and usually had more time left than my opponents. Ian Nepomniachtchi said that his loss versus Zhigalko may have cost him the chances of winning the tournament. But he was content with his 2nd place and admitted that Magnus' victory was well deserved.
43...?
21...?
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